The first written record of the village is its listing in the
Domesday Book. Spelt
Sudtone and
Suttone the name is thought to mean "south farm". Sutton Castle was built c1220, though now an oval
motte is all that remains. Unusually, the castle is a long way from the village and church.
John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, son of
King Edward III, held the manor of Sutton in the 14th century. A large earthen mound surrounded by a moat, in Sutton Park, is said to be the site of his manor house. It is now the 17th green of the
John O'Gaunt golf course. Local tradition tells that the village was formerly hereabout but later relocated south to its present site. Sutton was the birthplace of General
John Burgoyne the British army officer, politician and dramatist best known for his role in the
American War of Independence. He lived with his family at Sutton Park. In 1741, the Sutton Enclosure Act was passed; the first Enclosure Act in Bedfordshire. Local Enclosure Acts allowed the major landowners in the area to reorganise their widely separated landholdings. This produced a larger estate for the
Burgoynes. Sutton Park House was destroyed by a fire in 1825. It was subsequently re-designed in 1876. The John O'Gaunt Public House was
licensed in 1835 and created from three 18th-century
thatched cottages. The Ordnance Survey map of 1900 shows a number of allotments in and to the east of the village centre. ==Packhorse bridge and ford==